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The scarlet ibis questions.

Exposition:

Rising Action:

Climax:

Falling Action:

Resolution:

Who is the story's protagonist?

What type of character is the protagonist (flat, round, static, dynamic)?

Textual evidence to support this:

Who or what is the story's antagonist?

Describe the setting of the short story in 2-3 sentences. Provide as much detail as possible and remember that setting involves many components, like time, place, weather, historical context, and social environment.

Identify two conflicts from the short story.

Conflict 1 description:

Type of conflict:

Conflict 2 description:

Identify two conflicts from the short story.

Conflict 1 description:

Type of conflict:

Conflict 2 description:

Type of conflict:

Point of view this story is told from:

Textual evidence to support this:

In a complete sentence, state the story's universal theme:

How did the author develop the theme from the exposition through the resolution? Respond in at least 2-3 complete sentences.

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

Authors build themes in stories using symbols, settings, dialogue, and actions. Themes link big ideas to the story's action. To find themes, readers can look for repeated symbols, how settings affect characters, dialogue that mentions similar ideas, and important character decisions.

Characters' actions and motivations drive a story. A story also conveys some sort of larger message in its theme. Understanding how your character would behave in different circumstances aides the writer in creating plot points that drive that character into an action that supports the story's theme.

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